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The origins of 13 everyday sayings non-English speakers don't understand
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Have you ever had to "separate the wheat from the chaff"? Or "fly by the seat of your pants"?
你曾經(jīng)“把糠從小麥里篩出來(lái)”(separate the wheat from the chaff)過(guò)嗎?或者“讓屁股蛋來(lái)引領(lǐng)飛行方向”(fly by the seat of your pants)過(guò)嗎?
Linguistic researchers found the origins of these and other everyday phrases that don't make sense to non-English speakers in a study commissioned by Privilege Insurance.
在一項(xiàng)由Privilege保險(xiǎn)公司委托開(kāi)展的研究中,語(yǔ)言學(xué)家發(fā)現(xiàn),這些以及其它日常習(xí)語(yǔ)的起源在非英語(yǔ)使用者看來(lái)并說(shuō)不通。
Keep scrolling to see the 12 origins of everyday phrases, as well as one bonus phrase no one can agree on.
來(lái)看看以下這12個(gè)眾說(shuō)紛紜的日常習(xí)語(yǔ)的起源,最后還有一個(gè)附贈(zèng)的習(xí)語(yǔ)哦。
If you are very drunk, you may be "three sheets to the wind." The phrase comes from having a ship's sails properly fastened.
如果你喝得酩酊大醉,也許你就成了“三條風(fēng)中凌亂的帆繩”(three sheets to the wind)。這一習(xí)語(yǔ)來(lái)自于適度拉緊的船帆。
According to researchers, "sheets" refer to the ropes that fasten a sail. If one of your sheets isn't properly tied down, the ship would become difficult to control and would be "to the wind," or moving erratically.
研究者稱,sheets指的是固定船帆的繩索。一旦一條繩索沒(méi)有綁緊,船便會(huì)變得難以控制,隨風(fēng)行駛,或者飄搖不定。
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